Reference: Intelligence Community Directive (ICD) Number 206 Source Requirements for Disseminated Analytic Products

Director of National Intelligence et al (IC)
ICD 206
ICD 206

This is an interesting reference but it fails to deal with the core problem: the national and defense intelligence communities are not providing enough useful credible information or intelligence (sense-making) to the combatant commanders and the company commanders.  Neither national nor defense intelligence are structured to actually support policy makers or acquisition managers on a day to day basis.  The entire national and defense intelligence structures are stagnant right where it matters most: discovering, discriminating, distilling, and delivering the cream from all sources in all languages to the people putting their lives on the line.  It is not working!

Update:  See also:

Reference: Fixing Intel–A Blueprint for Making Intelligence Relevant in Afghanistan

Reference: BGen McMaster at ODNI on Afghanistan

2009 Smart Nation-Safe Nation Act

Legislation

This is an updated version of the Smart Nation Act that appears in the book by that title.  While it was originally developed in consultation with Congressman Rob Simmons (R-CT-02), whose Foreword to the book provides a brilliant context for understanding why this is so essential to the future of America and the world, this specific document has morphed so much that it is better to say that it is inspired by Congressman Simmons rather than endorsed by him–if and when he returns to the Hill as a Senator, he will surely have his own priorities consistent with the needs of his constituents in Connecticut who have suffered so much from the “rule by secrecy” of Wall Street and the two parties serving Wall Street.

Smart-Safe Nation Act
Smart-Safe Nation Act

Reference: Intelligence Community Directive (ICD) Number 300: Management, Integration, and Oversight of Intelligence Collection and Covert Action

Director of National Intelligence et al (IC)
OCD 300
OCD 300

Phi Beta Iota Editorial Comment (DOI: 11 August 2009)

This directive is “senior” to directive 301 but rather strangely does not appear to be included in the essential references relevant to creating the OSINT discipline.  Key points:

1.  OSINT is co-equal to HUMINT and TECHINT in DNI emphasis and stature, but the ADDNI/OS does not appear to report directly to the DDNI/C, has no staff, no program line, and is generally a sideshow.  The DNI should be challenged to make good on how this Directive treats OSINT.

2.  This directive also identifies the Mission Managers as key players, and they have not, that we can see, been included by the ADDNI/OS as they should be.

3.  Despite the best of intentions, the morphing of the Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) into the Open Source Center (OSC), both CIA entities whatever their label, has been a disaster.  We have destroyed FBIS, which was once a world-class foreign broadcast monitoring service, and put in its place a mediocre and poorly-informed make-believe service of common concern that makes promises it cannot keep, has done a great deal of damage to defense OSINT, and is incapable of organizing a Whole of Government OSINT capability.  The DDNI/C needs to revisit this, it cannot be done at lower levels.

4.  Authorities and Responsibilities of the DDNI/C include, as item 1(4), attention to gaps with OSINT.  This is a huge responsibility that has not been addressed by the DDNI/C, who needs to understand that OSINT, properly funded and managed, can resolve at least 50% of the extant gaps, and probably closer to 80%.

5.  The DDNI/C is responsible for helping the DDNI/M address competency and qualifications within the various collection disciplines.  This has not been done for OSINT, in part because those doing the defining are defining on the basis on what little they know.  They do not know what they do not know.  The DDNI/C needs an external advisory board fully familiar with global OSINT skills and competencies to make this right.

6.  This directive explicitly states that the ADDNI/OS is the Chair of the National Open Source Council.  The ADDNI/OS is in violation of this directive in delegating that duty to the Director of the CIA/DNI OSC.  Unless the ADDNI/OS wishes to switch places with the latter, this assigned duty must be immediately restored as intended, to the ADDNI/OS alone.

7.  The ADDNI/OS is charged by this directive with overseeing the OSC.  By all accounts, what the ADDNI/OS has actually done is ceded all responsibility to the OSC.  The DDNI/C needs to examine this situation and take corrective action.  It bears mention that the ADDNI/OS has zero authority, no staff to speak of (less one incredibly gifted person long over-worked and long over-due for recognition), and evidently no “big picture” justifying his appointment to the position.  At the DNI level, OSINT does not exist in tangible relevant form.

8.  The scattered assignment of executive agency to CIA, FBI, and DIA needs to be re-visited.  The OSC should be limited to serving the CIA at the same time that FBIS is restored as an independent entity.  It will take years to undo the damage, including the loss of foreign translators and subject-matter experts that FBIS was induced to lay off.  The National Virtual Translation Center should be put into the Open Source Agency, along with the National Documents Exploitation Center which still appears in this document as National Media Exploitation Center, a misnomer.

On balance, ICD 300 is superior to ICD 301 and needs to be re-visited before ICD 301 can be updated.  We recommend that the DDNI/C convene a very small group including Joe Markowitz, Boyd Sutton, and Robert Steele, as well as the chief librarians from the Library of Congress, the Government Accountability Office, and the Department of State, and that the entire OSINT account be scrubbed so that first ICD 300, and then ICD 301, and be completely revised and re-issued on 1 October 2009.

Amazon Book Lists: Steele’s 2005-2009 Mixed Bag

Book Lists

9/11 Blockbusters Featuring Dick Cheney (March 13, 2006)

Atlas Visualizations Ready to Be Converted Into Serious Games (June 21, 2007)

Biomimicry, Benevolent Bacteria, and Green Everything (November 20, 2007)

Books Relevant to Evaluating Cheney (January 11, 2007)

Capitalism 3.0 aka Natural Capitalism aka True Cost (March 19, 2007)

Collective and Commercial Intelligence for Peace and Prosperity (December 1, 2007)

Creating Infinite Stabilizing Wealth (June 14, 2008)

Environmental Security as a Foundation for Total Security (December 9, 2006)

Ethics, Faith, and Morality: The Vital Ingredients for Saving Earth (November 20, 2007)

Great Spy DVDs (July 26, 2007)

Grotesquely Over-Priced Books (August 21, 2010)

Impeachment Guides for Citizens Who Cannot Take Two More Years (February 4, 2007)

Infinite Wealth of Knowledge and Networks (December 31, 2006)

Intelligence Books Published by OSS/EIN International Press (August 21, 2010)

Iraq After Action Reports (June 21, 2007)

Leadership Books Neither Squishy nor Pontifical (February 26, 2008)

Moral Leadership Through Open Source Intelligence (January 29, 2007)

Open Everything (June 21, 2007)

People Protest Non-Violent Power–Dump the Two Party System (US Focus) (January 12, 2008)

Racing Sailing: Rainy Day Reading and Viewing (July 29, 2007)

Religion & National Security (June 21, 2007)

Sailing Library–Best of the Best (June 28, 2009)

Screwing the 90% That Do All the Real Work (January 29, 2007)

Serious Non-Fiction DVDs (October 3, 2006)

Smart Security in an Ambiguous World (September 29, 2006)

Sustainability, Resilience, Panarchy, Alternative Values (February 25, 2008)

Sustainability, Resilience, Panarchy, Alternative Values (February 25, 2008)

Timeless Top Ten Books (July 21, 2007)

Top Ten Books for Saving the Planet (Okay, Eleven) (July 29, 2007)

Top Terrorism Books (October 7, 2006)

Transpartisan Democracy–Saving the American Republic (September 16, 2008)